During fall 2013 I and the track gang at the Danish heritage
railway HVB worked with steel sleepered track panels. The work with track panels on HVB was mentioned on this blog in November. Among the
most prevalent two or three types of panels we found another type with unusual
sleepers. The sleepers had rounded ends with a small drain hole near each end.
Our first guess as to origin were early Decauville track panels or WW1 French army
track, but we found it hard to believe that WW1 track had come to Denmark, let
alone survived for 100 years.
Steel sleepers with rounded ends riveted to light rails. Here seen before transport to HVB. Photo: Steffen Lyngesen. |
A search in
books, online and among friends on several yahoo-groups and on this blog, did
in fact reveal that the track panels with a high degree of probability can
trace their history back to the Great War. The
drain holes should according to several sources indicate that the track panels
are from the US army. The measurements of
one of our sleepers fit precisely to a drawing of an American sleeper on a
track panel with 16 pound rail. On many images from the French light railways,
however, you can clearly see track panels with sleepers that also have the
drain holes. So while much indicates that our unusual track panels are from WW1
we will probably never find out if they are French or American.
How the
track panels made their way to Denmark is quite a mystery. HVB
bought the batch of track panels that included the WW1 rails from a farmer on
the Danish island of Falster. He probably didn’t buy track from afar, so
someone else must have brought the track panels to Denmark. The most likely
explanation is that the track came to Denmark during the German occupation
1940-1945. The German occupation of France spread French light railway material
as far away as Demjansk and North Caucasus in the Soviet Union. So why
shouldn’t a stack of track panels not find its way to Denmark?
Considering their age, the track panels are in a fine condition. We will take good care of them and maybe exhibit a few of them to the public. They can be HVB’s small contribution to the anniversary of WW1 in the coming years.
Assembly of a French 370 mm mortar. Notice the short track panel in the foreground. The sleepers have rounded ends with drain holes. Photo: ECPAD. |
Considering their age, the track panels are in a fine condition. We will take good care of them and maybe exhibit a few of them to the public. They can be HVB’s small contribution to the anniversary of WW1 in the coming years.
Sources consulted includes: Eric Fresnes: ”70 ans de
chemins de fer betteraviers en France.”, Christian Cenac: ”La Voie de 60
Militaire de la Guerre de 14-18 en France”’, Richard Dunn: ”Narrow Gauge to No
Man’s Land”’ and ”The Regimental History of the Twenty-First Engineers Light
Railway AEF.” Arnoud Bongards from Decauville Museum, the Netherlands and Roy Link, Wales
contributed valuable information as well.
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